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      Nidotherapy in the treatment of substance misuse, psychosis and personality disorder: secondary analysis of a controlled trial

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          Abstract

          Aims and method

          To examine the clinical outcome and bed usage in patients with comorbid substance misuse and psychosis. The patients were randomised to ordinary assertive outreach team care or to enhanced assertive outreach with nidotherapy. Ratings of clinical symptoms, social function, engagement with services, bed usage (primary outcome after 1 year) and economic costs were assessed at baseline and at 6 and 12 months after randomisation.

          Results

          Patients referred to nidotherapy had similar reduction in symptoms and engagement, with marginal superiority in social function ( P = 0.045). There was a 110% reduction in hospital bed use after 1 year compared with control assertive care ( P = 0.03). The mean cost savings for each patient allocated to nidotherapy was £14705 per year, mainly as a consequence of reduced psychiatric bed use.

          Clinical implications

          Nidotherapy shows promise in the treatment of substance misuse and psychosis and may reduce hospital bed usage.

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          Most cited references2

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          Is Open Access

          Retrospective analysis of hospital episode statistics, involuntary admissions under the Mental Health Act 1983, and number of psychiatric beds in England 1996-2006

          Objective To analyse the number of voluntary and involuntary (detentions under the Mental Health Act 1983) admissions for mental disorders between 1996 and 2006 in England. Design Retrospective analysis. Setting England. Main outcome measures Number of voluntary and involuntary admissions for mental disorders in England’s health service, number of involuntary admissions to private beds, and number of NHS beds for patients with mental disorders or learning disabilities. Results Admissions for mental disorders in the NHS in England peaked in 1998 and then started to fall. Reductions in admissions were confined to patients with depression, learning disabilities, or dementia. Admissions for schizophrenic and manic disorders did not change whereas those for drug and alcohol problems increased. The number of NHS psychiatric beds decreased by 29%. The total number of involuntary admissions per annum increased by 20%, with a threefold increase in the likelihood of admission to a private facility. Patients admitted involuntarily occupied 23% of NHS psychiatric beds in 1996 but 36% in 2006. Conclusions Psychiatric inpatient care changed considerably in the decade from 1996 to 2006, with more involuntary admissions to fewer NHS beds. The case mix has shifted further towards psychotic and substance misuse disorders, which has changed the milieu of inpatient wards. Increasing proportions of involuntary patients were admitted to private facilities.
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            Collecting service use data for economic evaluation in DSPD populations: development of the Secure Facilities Service Use Schedule.

            Economic evaluation of the Dangerous and Severe Personality Disorder Programme is essential to ensure value for money. The collection of individual-level service use information is crucial to any such evaluation, but the best way to collect these data in secure facilities is unclear. To develop a method for the collection of individual-level service use information for prisoners/patients in secure facilities. Services provided within secure facilities were identified through examination of facility and policy literature, and discussions with managerial and clinical staff. Appropriate methods of measuring the quantities of services used were then explored and a new research tool capable of capturing all relevant services was developed and pilot tested. The Secure Facilities Service Use Schedule (SF-SUS) records service use information from records and is capable of capturing data on the use of all individual-level services provided within a secure facility plus external services commonly accessed by occupants. Discussion The SF-SUS is able to collect meaningful individual-level service use information for the economic evaluation of services provided within secure facilities.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              applab
              The Psychiatrist
              Psychiatrist
              Royal College of Psychiatrists
              1758-3209
              1758-3217
              January 2011
              January 2 2018
              : 35
              : 01
              : 9-14
              Article
              10.1192/pb.bp.110.029983
              74c28118-755c-4779-8fb5-ce41d1081422
              © 2018
              History

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